Place a die of your chosing inside the die and screw it shut. You now have a 2 part die. Numbered 0 to 5 so if you place a D10 inside you can get a value from 0 to 59.
The inner sphere and the points are 2 separate pieces. there is 1mm clearance between them so as you roll the dice the 2 halves will move around but because of the geometry of the die they can not separate.
The points are arranged to correspond with the corners of a rhombic triacontahedron.
The inner sphere and the points are 2 separate pieces. there is 1mm clearance between them so as you roll the dice the 2 halves will move around but because of the geometry of the die they can not separate. The points are arranged to correspond with the corners of a icosahedron.
The inner sphere and the points are 2 separate pieces. there is 1mm clearance between them so as you roll the dice the 2 halves will move around but because of the geometry of the die they can not separate. The points are arranged to correspond with the corners of a dodecahedron.
The inner sphere and the points are 2 separate pieces. there is 1mm clearance between them so as you roll the dice the 2 halves will move around but because of the geometry of the die they can not separate. The points are arranged to correspond with the corners of a dodecahedron.
When holding in your hand this looks like a ball with lots of little spikes(92 if I counted correctly) hence its name. However it is in fact a very diferent D6. When seated on the table there is an upper pentagon shape made up of 10 spikes. Inside this pentagon is a circle of spikes which give you the value of the die face. 1-6.
This is a 36 sided die numbered 2 to 12 which will give the same odds of rolling as 2 standard D6s. The long name is after the shape of the die. pentagonal hexatriacontahedron which means it has 36 faces all of which have 5 sides.
A D8 with the phases of the moon on it. It is made of all circles because we all know that even when the moon is a sliver it is still a sphere. The shape is completely fair.